This document discusses seven key aspects of managing healthcare quality and safety: 1) seeing reality objectively, 2) understanding how work is actually performed, 3) using data to drive leadership decisions, 4) developing organizational capacity and individual capabilities, 5) cultivating psychological safety, 6) avoiding too many improvement projects, and 7) the importance of personal leadership. It provides references and insights from experts in the field on each of these topics to support healthcare quality improvement efforts.
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2018 11 13 management of qi cple
1. Managing healthcare quality and safety
1.Seeing things how they are
2.How the work works
3.Data driven leadership
4.Capacity and capability
5.Psychological safety
6.Prosjectitis or a plan?
7.Personals leadership
2. Managing healthcare quality and safety
1.Seeing things how they are
2.How the work works
3.Data driven leadership
4.Capacity and capability
5.Psychological safety
6.Prosjectitis or a plan?
7.Personals leadership
”What we observe is not nature itself, but nature
exposed to our method of questioning.”
Werner Heisenberg
27. “Fear is toxic to both safety and improvement.”
NHS: A commitment to learn—a promise to act
28.
29.
30. Seeing
things how
they are
Data driven
leadership
Capacity
and
capability
Psycho-
logical
safety
Prosject-
titis or
plan
How the
work
works
31. An impressive firework of ongoing quality improvement initiatives in the Danish healthcare system
Too much of a good thing…?
Gerdes, U. Centre for Quality
32. Nelson EC, Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Dartmouth
Medical School & Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center,
presented at ISQua, London October 23, 2006
33. Seeing
things how
they are
Data driven
leadership
Capacity
and
capability
Psycho-
logical
safety
Prosject-
titis or
plan
Personal
leader-
ship
How the
work
works
40. WAI—WAD
Observe and
follow up
Use data as a
«window to the
work»
Invest in
professional
development Create a safe
environment
Work on the
system
Combine
transfor-
matory and
operational
leadership
41.
42. ”I would rather have my ignorance than
another men’s knowledge, because I have got
so much of it.”
P 250—Mark Twain’s letters [1917 ed.], Vol 1
43. Litterature
• Batalden, P: Leading the improvement of healht care, a one page book, her
• Botwinick L et al (2006). Leadership Guide to Patient Safety. IHI Innovation Series white paper. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Institute for Healthcare
Improvement. (Available on www.IHI.org)
• Deming WE: 14 points for management, https://deming.org/explore/fourteen-points
• Detert GR, Buris E (2016): Can your employees really speak freely? Harvard Business Review, Jan-Feb
• Ferlie EB, Shortell SM (2001): Improving the quality of health care in the United Kingdom and the United States. Milbank Quarterly, 79,2
• Hardace et al (2011): What’s leadership got to do with it? Exploring links between quality improvement and leadership in the NHS. The Health
Foundation.
• Helsefirektoratet 2005: Og bedre skal det bli – Nasjonal strategi for kvalitetsforbedring i sosial- og helsetjenesten 2005–2015
• Hollnagel E. et al (2015): From Safety-I to Safety-II: A White Paper. The Resilient Health Care Net: Published simultaneously by the University of
Southern Denmark, University of Florida, USA, and Macquarie University, Australia.
• Institute of Medicine (IOM). Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century. Washington, D.C: National Academy Press; 2001.
• Kozes IM, Posner BZ (1988): The leadership challenge: How to get extraordinary things done in organizations. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass
• Joshua M. Liao JM et al (2014) Speaking Up About The Dangers Of The Hidden Curriculum. Health Affairs, 33, 1: 168-171
• National Advisory Group on the Safety of Patients in England (2013): A promise to learn—a commitment to act
• Pronovost Peter J, Berenholtz Sean M, Needham Dale M. Translating evidence into practice: a model for large scale knowledge translation BMJ 2008; 337
:a1714
• Reinertsen JL et al (2008): Seven Leadership Leverage Points for Organization-Level. Improvement in Health Care (Second Edition). Cambridge,
Massachusetts: Institute for Healthcare Improvement. (Available on www.ihi.org)
• Stafford W: A ritual to read to each other
• Størkholm, M H: Innovation inside the box: How contextual constraints can contribute to improvement in health care. PhD thesis, Karolinska Institut 2018
• Swensen S et al (2013): High-Impact Leadership: Improve Care, Improve the Health of Populations, and Reduce Costs. IHI White Paper. Cambridge,
Massachusetts: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; 2013. (Available at ihi.org)
• Thude B et al (2018): Staff acting resiliently at two hospitals. Paper three of PhD thesis Leaderhip at Danish Hospitals. Submitted to Leadership in Health
Services
• Wears B (2015): Improvement and evaluation. QSHC, 24: 92-94
• Weiner BJ et al (1997): Promoting clinical involvement in hospital quality improvement efforts: The effects of top management, board and physician
leadership. Health Services Research, 32, 4
• Wiig S et al (2014) Talking about quality: Exploring how quality is conceptualized across hospitals and health care systems. BMC Health Services
Research
44. Christian von Plessen, MD ph.d.
Director/research lead
Centre for Quality
Associate Professor
Institute for Regional Health Research
T: +45 2482 2165
christian.von.plessen@rsyd.dk
P.V. Tuxensvej 5, 5500 Middelfart, Denmark
www.centerforkvalitet.dk
No conflicts of interest